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JAM | Mar 26, 2025

PM Andrew Holness | US-Jamaica relationship still robust, we look forward to greater collaboration

/ Our Today

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Prime Minister Andrew Holness greets Secretary of State Marco Rubio on his arrival to the Office of the Prime Minister for bilateral talks and a joint press briefing on Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (OUR TODAY photo/Oraine Meikle)

Prime Minister Andrew Holness says the United States remains a strategic partner for Jamaica as Secretary of State Marco Rubio landed on the island today (March 26) to advance the Trump administration’s foreign policy in the Caribbean.

Holness, addressing a joint press conference at the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM), indicated that bilateral discussions with the senior US official were “productive and constructive”—and expressed his confidence that the dialogue will lead to “tangible outcomes” for citizens on both sides.

The discussions, according to the prime minister, touched on foreign direct investment, logistics opportunities, transnational crime, Cuba’s contentious medical brigade and the unfolding security crisis in neighbouring Haiti.

Rubio, who alighted from the Air Force’s Boeing C-32 plane just before noon in the Jamaican capital, hailed the ‘historic friendship’ between the two countries and hinted at a willingness by Washington to review travel advisories which have affected tourist arrivals.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio disembarking from the Air Force’s Boeing C-32 on the tarmac of the Norman Manley International Airport in Kingston ahead of bilateral talks in Caribbean leaders in Jamaica on Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (Photo: JIS/Pool via OUR TODAY)

It is a packed agenda for Rubio, who after bilateral meetings with leaders from Barbados, Trinidad and Tobago and Haiti in Kingston, departs for Guyana and Suriname later this week as part of his English-speaking Caribbean tour.

Read Holness’ press statement in full:

“Good afternoon,

It is my great pleasure to welcome United States Secretary of State Marco Rubio to Jamaica. I have known Secretary Rubio for some time and I have always been impressed by his deep knowledge and understanding of the region.

Secretary Rubio, we are deeply honoured that you have chosen Jamaica as your first official stop in the English-speaking Caribbean. This visit so early in your term confirms the strength of the historic friendship and strategic partnership between Jamaica and the United States—one built on shared values, democratic
ideals, and deep people-to-people ties.

Our nations have long been united by a common commitment to freedom, prosperity, and security, and your visit today reaffirms that bond.

Today, we engaged in productive and constructive discussions focused on strengthening this partnership and expanding opportunities for collaboration.

During our meeting, we addressed several critical areas of cooperation:

  • Security: We reaffirmed our commitment to enhancing cooperation in combating transnational crime, ensuring the collective safety of our citizens and mutually secured borders. We discussed a Global war on gangs and there is already significant policy alignment with both countries in this
    regard. The United States has been instrumental in supporting Jamaica’s efforts to bolster its marine domain awareness and intelligence surveillance capacities, which are crucial in our fight against organised criminal networks.

We discussed expanding and repurposing development assistance towards our shared goals including security.

Secretary of State Marco Rubio during his bilateral meeting with Prime Minister Andrew Holness at the Office of the Prime Minister on Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (OUR TODAY photo/Oraine Meikle)

This will exponentially expand our cooperation in fighting lottery scammers, transnational organized crime, trafficking in guns and building safer communities. We are committed to ensuring our partnership delivers results in driving down criminality and trafficking in this hemisphere.

  • On Haiti, we look forward to continued partnership with the United States as we seek to work with Haitian leadership and stakeholders to address the ongoing crises in Haiti. The extraordinary humanitarian, civil and national security challenges in Haiti pose an acute threat to Haitians,
    to regional stability and indeed to its close neighbours including Jamaica.

We agreed that we must do everything we can, to stabilise the security situation in Haiti so that they are better able to build capacity and address their political and humanitarian challenges.

Haitian National police SWAT unit and Kenyan Police walk trough a steep hill to board an armoured vehicle after one of the vehicles broke down on a steep hill while patrolling through a neighborhood, after the arrival of the first contingent of Kenyan police as part of a peacekeeping mission, in Port-au-Prince, Haiti June 28, 2024. (Photo: REUTERS/Ricardo Arduengo/File)
  • Trade and investment: Recognising the United States as Jamaica’s largest trading partner, with bilateral trade surpassing US$3 billion in 2023, we explored avenues to further expand trade relations between our two countries.  Renewal of the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act (CBERA) was raised as a matter of critical importance to trade for ourselves and all CARICOM member states.

We also explored means to attract increased US investment into Jamaica’s emerging sectors. With our stable macroeconomic framework and positive growth trajectory,

Jamaica is open for enhanced US investment across multiple sectors, including energy and near-shoring
opportunities.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness listens as US Secretary of State Marco Rubio addresses journalists at a joint press briefing held at the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM) on Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (OUR TODAY photo/Oraine Meikle)
  • Logistics: The discussion also touched on working with U.S. companies to leverage Jamaica’s location as a premier transhipment hub in the Americas. This will further bolster Jamaica’s work to become a major logistics hub for global trade.
  • Labour: The United States and Jamaica have an 80-year old history of bilateral labour agreements where we provide short-term skilled and semi-skilled labour in sectors such as agriculture and hospitality. We discussed ways to expand and enhance these agreements, including skills development partnerships to upskill and reskill Jamaican workers.
  • Travel advisory: We discussed the significant progress that we are making in bringing down all major crimes and that Jamaica today is safer than at any time in the last two decades. In fact, crime against visitors represents less than 0.01 per cent of the more than 3 million visitors to Jamaica annually, We are committed to working collaboratively to ensure that travel advisories reflect the current realities and promote safe travel.

I am confident that the dialogue initiated today will lead to tangible outcomes, benefiting both our peoples and contributing to mutual stability and prosperity. Indeed, our concern for enhanced regional and hemispheric security and prosperity was recognised as a shared one.

I wish my CARICOM colleagues who are now in Kingston, productive meetings with the secretary this afternoon.

Prime Minister Andrew Holness and US Secretary of State Marco Rubio in conversation on the sidelines of a joint press briefing held at the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM) on Wednesday, March 26, 2025. (OUR TODAY photo/Oraine Meikle)

Jamaica remains committed to fostering a partnership with the United States—one grounded in mutual respect, shared values, and a collective ambition for a stronger, more resilient future.

I extend my sincere gratitude to Secretary Rubio and his delegation for their visit and for the productive and forward-looking discussions we have had.

We look forward to building upon this foundation, deepening our collaboration, and taking our partnership to new and greater heights for the lasting benefit of both our nations.

Ladies and gentlemen, thank you very much for joining us and I now give the floor to Secretary Rubio for his press statement.”

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